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J-85 jet engine noise measured in the ONERA S1 wind tunnel and extrapolated to far fieldNoise from a J-85 turbojet with a conical, convergent nozzle was measured in simulated flight in the ONERA S1 Wind Tunnel. Data are presented for several flight speeds up to 130 m/sec and for radiation angles of 40 to 160 degrees relative to the upstream direction. The jet was operated with subsonic and sonic exhaust speeds. A moving microphone on a 2 m sideline was used to survey the radiated sound field in the acoustically treated, closed test section. The data were extrapolated to a 122 m sideline by means of a multiple-sideline source-location method, which was used to identify the acoustic source regions, directivity patterns, and near field effects. The source-location method is described along with its advantages and disadvantages. Results indicate that the effects of simulated flight on J-85 noise are significant. At the maximum forward speed of 130 m/sec, the peak overall sound levels in the aft quadrant were attentuated approximately 10 dB relative to sound levels of the engine operated statically. As expected, the simulated flight and static data tended to merge in the forward quadrant as the radiation angle approached 40 degrees. There is evidence that internal engine or shock noise was important in the forward quadrant. The data are compared with published predictions for flight effects on pure jet noise and internal engine noise. A new empirical prediction is presented that relates the variation of internally generated engine noise or broadband shock noise to forward speed. Measured near field noise extrapolated to far field agrees reasonably well with data from similar engines tested statically outdoors, in flyover, in a wind tunnel, and on the Bertin Aerotrain. Anomalies in the results for the forward quadrant and for angles above 140 degrees are discussed. The multiple-sideline method proved to be cumbersome in this application, and it did not resolve all of the uncertainties associated with measurements of jet noise close to the jet. The simulation was complicated by wind-tunnel background noise and the propagation of low frequency sound around the circuit.
Document ID
19910010510
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Technical Publication (TP)
Authors
Soderman, Paul T.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA., United States)
Julienne, Alain
(Office National d'Etudes et de Recherches Aerospatiales Paris, France)
Atencio, Adolph, Jr.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1991
Subject Category
Acoustics
Report/Patent Number
NASA-TP-3053
A-89265
NAS 1.60:3053
Report Number: NASA-TP-3053
Report Number: A-89265
Report Number: NAS 1.60:3053
Accession Number
91N19823
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 307-50-81
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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